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Thursday, November 21, 2024  
19 Jumada Al-Awwal 1446  

SC issues detailed judgement in reserved seats case, says ECP cannot challenge court order

The judgement had been announced on July 12

The Supreme Court of Pakistan released its detailed judgement in the reserved seats case on Monday.

The judegement, written by Justice Mansoor Ali Shah, is 70 pages long.

The decision says that the case before the court was not an ordinary one but was instead a matter of high public importance.

The decision said the matter was not decided on the basis of assumptions but to allow the matter to be settled in a concrete matter.

“Instead of deciding such an important matter, which essentially relates to the right and value of the votes of millions of voters, merely on assumptions, presumptions or oral statements, this fact should be determined with certain and concrete material: (i) the written statement (declaration) by the returned candidate concerned, and (ii) its written confirmation (certificate) by PTI,” the decision reads.

The judgement also says that the ECP must ensure transparency in the elections ot ensure public trust in the system.

“We find it important to emphasize that the Commission, as a constitutional “electoral management body”, is not merely an administrative entity but a fundamental “guarantor institution” of democratic processes, with a constitutional status akin to a “fourth branch of government,” the judgement said.

Read more:

How party position in NA can change after SC verdict

ECP shows willingness to implement reserved seats judgment with ifs and buts

Reserved seats: Justices Khan, Afghan of SC say relief granted to PTI will be self-created

The judgement also added that the ECP, as a guarantor, cannot challenge the court order as an aggrieved person and contest the case as a party.

“… a body performing its quasi-judicial function in a matter between two rival parties cannot be treated as an aggrieved person if its decision is set aside or modified by a higher forum or by a court of competent jurisdiction. Such a body, therefore, does not have locus standi to challenge the decision of that higher forum or court.”

The decision in the reserved seats case was announced by a full court bench on July 12. By a majority of 8 judges, the bench had awarded reserved seats to the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf.

The judgement had laid waste to the ruling coalition’s hopes for securing two-thirds majority in the National Assembly.

However, several members of the ruling coalition had termed the decision as a ‘rewriting’ of the constitution. The government had also brough changes to the Election Act soon after.

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Supreme Court

Election commission of Pakistan

reserved seats